Senior Kristopher Del Campo, who chairs the DePaul YAF chapter, contacted public safety officials after pro-abortion thugs tore the flags from the ground and threw them in trash cans around campus.

About a week later, as The Daily Caller reported, Kevin Connolly, an investigator for DePaul’s public safety department, produced a brief report listing the names of 13 students who flatly admitted to wrecking the display. The reports said the vandals “had seen anti-abortion posters around campus earlier in the day that they found offensive.” (RELATED: Students admit vandalizing display)

DePaul’s assistant dean of students, Domonic Rollins, provided Del Campo a copy of the report. The national website for Young Americans for Freedom then published it online.

Take a wild guess which student the nation’s largest Catholic school has now singled out for punishment.

Naturally, the student was Del Campo.

DePaul managed to find the Del Campo guilty of multiple violations of the Vincentian institution’s code of student responsibility. One of the charges brands the publication of the names as “disorderly, violent, intimidating or dangerous.” Another charge somehow related to “judicial process compliance.”

The senior is now for on probation for publicizing the names of fellow students who admitted to vandalizing his organization’s pro-life display. He must also write something called a reflection letter.

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) has intervened on behalf of Del Campo.

In a February 21 letter to DePaul’s President, Rev. Dennis Holtschneider, FIRE argued that Del Campo had the right to publicly identify the students who had admitted to vandalizing his group’s display. The letter further suggested that DePaul had violated Del Campo’s rights by charging him and then punishing him for speaking up about his own case.

“Students who purposefully vandalize the works of other students,” FIRE wrote, “should not expect to be shielded from the public consequences of their actions.”